Beekeeping For Dummies, UK Edition

Höfundur David Wiscombe; Howland Blackiston

Útgefandi Wiley Professional Development (P&T)

Snið Page Fidelity

Print ISBN 9781119972501

Útgáfa 1

Útgáfuár 2011

3.390 kr.

Description

Efnisyfirlit

  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • Table of Contents
  • Introduction
  • About This Book
  • How This Book Is Organised
  • Part I: Getting Hooked on Honey Bees
  • Part II: Starting Your Adventure
  • Part III: Looking Inside Your Hive
  • Part IV: Common Problems and Simple Solutions
  • Part V: Sweet Rewards
  • Part VI: The Part of Tens
  • Icons Used in This Book
  • Where to Go from Here
  • Part I: Getting Hooked on Honey Bees
  • Chapter 1: To Bee or Not to Bee?
  • Discovering the Benefits of Beekeeping
  • Harvesting liquid gold: Honey
  • Bees as pollinators: Their vital role in ensuring our food supply
  • Helping the bees; helping the environment
  • Passing on your knowledge
  • Good for your wellbeing; good for your health
  • Determining Your Beekeeping Potential
  • Environmental considerations
  • Being responsible and considering others
  • Costs and equipment
  • Time and commitment
  • Beekeeper personality traits
  • Overcoming Fear of Stings
  • Knowing what to do if you’re stung
  • Building up a tolerance
  • Watching for allergic reactions
  • Chapter 2: Life Inside the Honey Bee Hive
  • Basic Body Parts
  • Skeleton
  • Head
  • Thorax
  • Abdomen
  • The Amazing Language of Bees
  • Pheromones
  • Shall we dance?
  • Dividing Honey Bees into Three Castes
  • Her majesty, the queen
  • The industrious little worker bee
  • The woeful drone
  • The Honey Bee Life-Cycle
  • Egg
  • Larva
  • Pupa
  • Part II: Starting Your Adventure
  • Chapter 3: Locating Your Hive
  • Getting Over ‘Buzz Off!’: Consulting Family and Neighbours
  • Location, Location, Location: Where to Keep Your Hives
  • Providing for your thirsty bees
  • Understanding why your honey varies in colour and flavour
  • Knowing When to Start Your Adventure
  • Chapter 4: Stocking Up on Basic Beekeeping Equipment
  • Finding Out about the Modified National Hive
  • Knowing the Basic Parts of the Hive
  • Hive stand
  • Floor
  • Entrance block
  • Brood chamber
  • Queen excluder
  • Super
  • Frames
  • Foundation
  • Crown board
  • Roof
  • Ordering Hive Parts
  • Preparing for assembly
  • Adding on Feeders
  • Miller and Ashforth rapid feeders
  • Bucket feeder
  • Frame feeder
  • Stocking Up on Your Personal Beekeeping Equipment
  • Smoker
  • Hive tool
  • Covering Up with Bee-Proof Clothing
  • Veils
  • Gloves
  • Really Helpful Accessories
  • Elevated hive stand
  • Frame rest
  • Bee brush
  • Other necessities
  • Chapter 5: Obtaining and Hiving Your Bees
  • Determining the Kind of Bee You Want
  • Deciding How to Obtain Your Initial Bee Colony
  • Picking a reputable bee supplier
  • Deciding when to place your order
  • Buying a nucleus colony
  • Transferring your nucleus to a hive
  • Purchasing an established colony
  • Capturing a wild swarm of bees
  • Ordering package bees
  • Meeting and Greeting: The Day Your Bees Arrive
  • Bringing home your bees
  • Feeding your bees
  • Buzzing with Excitement: Putting Your Bees into the Hive
  • Part III: Looking Inside Your Hive
  • Chapter 6: Opening Your Hive
  • Setting an Inspection Schedule
  • Preparing to Visit Your Hive
  • Making ‘non-scents’ a part of personal hygiene
  • Getting dressed up and ready to go
  • Lighting your smoker
  • Opening the Hive
  • Removing the crown board
  • The Hive’s Open! Now What?
  • Chapter 7: What to Look for when You’re Inspecting
  • Exploring Basic Inspection Techniques: Examining a Full Colony
  • Removing the first frame
  • Working your way through the hive
  • Holding up frames for inspection
  • Understanding what to look for every time
  • Replacing frames
  • Closing the hive
  • Establishing a Colony from a Nucleus
  • Managing your nucleus
  • Starting your Colony with a Package of Bees
  • Checking in: A week after hiving your bees
  • The second and third weeks
  • Weeks four to eight
  • Chapter 8: Your Work throughout the Seasons
  • Lazy, Hazy Days of Summer
  • Your summer to-do list
  • Your summer time commitment
  • Falling Leaves Point to Autumn Tasks
  • Your autumn to-do list
  • Making one hive from two
  • Your autumn time commitment
  • Clustering in a Winter Wonderland
  • Your winter to-do list
  • Your winter time commitment
  • Spring Is in the Air: Starting Your Second Season
  • Your spring to-do list
  • Making two hives from one
  • Your spring time commitment
  • Administering spring medication
  • Reversing hive bodies
  • Part IV: Common Problems and Simple Solutions
  • Chapter 9: Heading Off Potential Problems
  • Avoiding Absconding
  • Swarming
  • Absconding
  • Where Did the Queen Go?
  • Letting nature take its course
  • Ordering a replacement queen
  • Introducing a new queen to the hive
  • Avoiding Chilled Brood
  • Dealing with the Dreaded Robbing Frenzies
  • Knowing the difference between normal and abnormal (robbing) behaviour
  • Putting a stop to a robbing attack
  • Preventing robbing in the first place
  • Ridding Your Hive of the Laying Worker Phenomenon
  • How to know if you have laying workers
  • Getting rid of laying workers
  • Preventing Pesticide Poisoning
  • Chapter 10: Treating Diseases and Considering Colony Collapse Disorder
  • Medicating when Necessary
  • Knowing the Big Six Bee Diseases
  • American foulbrood (AFB)
  • European foulbrood (EFB)
  • Nosema
  • Chalkbrood
  • Sacbrood
  • Stonebrood
  • A handy chart
  • Shedding Some Light on Colony Collapse Disorder and Vanishing Hives
  • Unlocking the mystery of the Mary Celeste hives
  • Discovering more about CCD
  • Exploring Potential Causes of CCD
  • The mobile phone theory
  • Pollinating insect research
  • A Final Word
  • Chapter 11: Buzz Off! Dealing with Honey Bee Pests
  • Preventing Parasitic Mites
  • Varroa mites
  • Controlling Varroa the natural way
  • Acarine (Tracheal mites)
  • Wax Moths
  • Ants, Ants and More Ants
  • Keeping Out Mice
  • Dealing with Birds that Have a Taste for Bees
  • Pest Control in a Nutshell
  • Chapter 12: Raising Your Own Queens
  • Why Raising Queens Makes You Proud
  • Accentuating the Positive: Choosing Good Traits
  • What Makes a Queen a Queen
  • Buzzing with love: Queen mating
  • Creating Demand: Making a Queenless Nuc
  • Queen Rearing: The Miller Method
  • Using an Artificial Swarm to Raise Queens
  • The Doolittle Method: Grafting
  • Tools and equipment
  • How it’s done
  • Trying Out the Jenter System
  • How it’s done
  • Providing nuptial housing
  • Finding a Home for Your Queens
  • Part V: Sweet Rewards
  • Chapter 13: Getting Ready for the Golden Harvest
  • Choosing Extracted, Comb, Chunk or Soft-Set Honey
  • Using the Right Equipment for the Job
  • Honey extractors
  • Uncapping knife
  • Honey strainers
  • Other handy gadgets for extracting honey
  • Comb honey equipment
  • Honey containers
  • Planning Your Honey Harvest Set-Up
  • Labelling and Selling Your Honey
  • Creating an attractive label
  • Finding places to market your honey
  • Chapter 14: Honey, I’m Home: Harvest Time
  • Knowing When to Harvest
  • Getting the Bees Out of the Honey Supers
  • Shakin’ ’em out
  • Using a bee escape
  • Fume board and bee repellent
  • Food of the Gods: Honey Extraction
  • Cleaning Up after Extracting
  • Controlling wax moths
  • Harvesting wax
  • Part VI: The Part of Tens
  • Chapter 15: Ten Fun Things to Do with Bees
  • Starting an Observation Hive
  • Planting Flowers for Your Bees
  • Brewing Mead: The Nectar of the Gods
  • Getting Creative with Propolis
  • Propolis tincture
  • Propolis ointment
  • Making Candles and Polish from Beeswax
  • Beeswax candles
  • Beeswax furniture polish
  • Beauty and the Bees
  • Beeswax lip balm
  • Beeswax and olive oil salve
  • Getting up Close with a Microscope
  • Chapter 16: Ten Frequently Asked Questions about Bee Behaviour
  • Chapter 17: Ten Delicious Honey Recipes
  • Appendix A: Helpful Resources
  • Honey Bee Websites
  • Apiservices
  • Bee Master Forum
  • BeeHoo
  • British Beekeepers Association
  • Bush Farm
  • Cornwall Honey
  • David A Cushman
  • The Beespace
  • Vita (Europe)
  • Bee Organisations and Conferences
  • Apimondia: International Federation of Beekeepers’ Associations
  • The BBKA Spring Convention
  • Bee Diseases Insurance Ltd (BDI)
  • Bee Improvement and Bee Breeders Association (BIBBA)
  • International Bee Research Association
  • The National Bee Unit of the Central Science Laboratory
  • The National Honey Show
  • The National Farmers Union
  • Bee Journals and Magazines
  • American Bee Journal
  • BBKA News
  • Bee Craft
  • Bee Culture
  • The Beekeepers Quarterly
  • Bee World
  • Beekeeping Supplies and Equipment
  • The Bee Shop
  • B J Sherriff
  • Brunel Microscopes Ltd
  • Compak
  • Giordan
  • Maisemore Apiaries Ltd
  • Modern Beekeeping
  • National Bee Supplies
  • Swienty Beekeeping Equipment
  • E H Thorne
  • Appendix B: Glossary
  • Index
  • EULA
Show More

Additional information

Veldu vöru

Rafbók til eignar

Reviews

There are no reviews yet.

Be the first to review “Beekeeping For Dummies, UK Edition”

Netfang þitt verður ekki birt. Nauðsynlegir reitir eru merktir *

Aðrar vörur

0
    0
    Karfan þín
    Karfan þín er tómAftur í búð